Alligator takes pit stop near Calif. intersection

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LANCASTER, Calif. (AP) — A Los Angeles County sheriff's deputy was suspicious. When he heard two women were spotted near a Lancaster, Calif., intersection, and one of them was holding an alligator, he didn't buy it.

"I'm thinking, 'Yeah, an alligator. OK,'" Deputy Michael Rust told the Los Angeles Times (http://lat.ms/13IVx4U) on Thursday. "Maybe an iguana, but an alligator?"

He investigated the report Tuesday morning and found not just a 4-foot alligator, but a kangaroo and monkey too, all inside the same van.

The women explained that the menagerie is part of the "Zoo to You" program in Paso Robles that introduces kids to animals.

The animals had just visited with students at Quartz Hill Elementary and had begun the nearly 200-mile journey back to their San Luis Obispo County when they pulled over for some emergency cleanup.

"The alligator urinated inside his cage, and it's a long ways back to Paso Robles with the smell of alligator urine," Rust said. "So they decided to pull over."

Rust says the driver decided to pull over because the alligator urine odor would be unpleasant during the hours-long drive to Paso Robles.

Rust said he gets constant calls about wildlife, but they're usually for the kind of wildlife that live in his semi-rural area.

"We get all kinds of animal calls, from bulls to bears to mountain lions," he said. "But I've never heard of an alligator."